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Scalene

Scalene is a term used primarily in geometry to describe a triangle in which all three side lengths are different. The word derives from Latin scalēnus, from Greek skalenos, meaning uneven or unequal.

In a scalene triangle, no two sides are equal, and consequently all three interior angles are distinct

Key properties include the following: the largest angle lies opposite the longest side, and the shortest angle

In broader usage, scalene can describe polygons whose sides are all of different lengths, though the term

as
well.
By
the
contrapositive,
if
two
angles
were
equal,
the
sides
opposite
them
would
be
equal,
which
would
make
the
triangle
isosceles
rather
than
scalene.
Scalene
triangles
can
be
acute
(all
angles
less
than
90
degrees),
obtuse
(one
angle
greater
than
90
degrees),
or
right-angled
(one
angle
exactly
90
degrees).
A
common
example
of
a
scalene
right
triangle
is
the
3-4-5
triangle.
lies
opposite
the
shortest
side.
The
area
of
a
scalene
triangle
can
be
found
using
Heron's
formula
when
all
three
side
lengths
are
known,
or
more
directly
via
the
formula
(1/2)ab
sin(C)
when
two
sides
and
the
included
angle
are
known.
is
most
commonly
applied
to
triangles.
Scalene
triangles
are
contrasted
with
isosceles
triangles
(two
equal
sides)
and
equilateral
triangles
(three
equal
sides).